You’ve been reading my words for a year.
This week, you’ll hear me speak.
I do very few interviews.
But this one felt too important not to share — because it’s not just strategy.
It’s the story that shaped the strategy.
In this 25-minute podcast, I opened up about what it really took to build, scale, and exit two companies — and what I’m building now..
Not the polished version.
The real version.
What I Shared (That Most Founders Don’t Say Out Loud):
I didn’t delegate because I loved control.
I did it out of fear.
Letting go of a business isn’t just a transaction.
It’s an identity crisis.
Your business is not your baby, team is not your family.
That belief quietly kills your performance and your valuation.
We don’t just work hard.
We work hard to justify success — to prove we deserve it.
But that’s not required.
Hustle isn’t noble or heroic. It’s noise.
Real growth began when I slowed down and started building it as a business — by design, not default.
I didn’t self-fund to be scrappy.
I did it to stay sovereign.
Because if freedom was the goal, I couldn’t trade it for speed.
Revenue ≠ Wealth.
Exit = Wealth. And that takes design.
We can play to our strengths. And we are allowed to move on to explore new and different things.
These aren’t just lessons I teach — they’re lessons I’ve lived.
Watch the Interview
If you’ve ever wondered what this journey looks like behind the scenes…this interview will give you a window into it:
(25 min — especially worth it if you’re in the messy middle)
Whether you’re in year 2 or year 20 — these lessons will meet you where you are.

📚 From My Bookshelf:
Actionable insights from books that transformed me and how I built.
This book took me from developer to founder.
Then almost broke me.
Until I learned—
it’s not about hacks.
It’s about who you become.
I broke down all 7 habits for founders building businesses that last.
Thank you for being here, I will see you next Thursday.
Surabhi
PS:
If something in the conversation resonates — hit reply and tell me.
This was a vulnerable one for me, and I’d love to hear your thoughts.